Devil's Gate is the best funny movie of Peter Aperlo, Clay Staub. This movie was introduced in 2017. We can counted many actors in this movie torrents, such as Milo Ventimiglia, Bridget Regan, Amanda Schull, Javier Botet. There are many categories, such as Sci-Fi, Thriller. This movie was rated by 8.3 in www.imdb.com. We have a good movie to watch. The runtime of this movie are awesome, about 94 minutes. Fakinsai is crazy uploader, he is very proactive. You should spend more time to watch this movie. If we must use one word to describe about this movies torrent, I think it should be 'Awesome', so what is your opinion. Do you know what are users? ChimTo is the best. I don't leave my laptop screen. Share this movies torrent to support us . You can read more in Google, Youtube, Wiki

Partnering with a deputy (Ashmore)| they track down the missing woman's husband (Ventimiglia) and find thatnothing is as it seems. Schull plays an FBI agent whohelps the local sheriff (Frakes) search for answers. Set in the small town of Devil's Gate| North Dakota| the film examines the disappearance of a local woman (Regan) and her young son

Users reviews

bill s (ru)

The movie just never comes together despite the good effort by Foster

Carolyn C (it)

It's fun, fun, fun, and one of those movies I always seem to end up channel-surfing to and watching with great enjoyment. Nicely scored as well. So why the four stars? Because of the iutstanding performances, laughs, air of intimacy created by the ensemble, and attention to detail. Finally, the depiction of the Secret Service agents in the light of recent revelations of widespread misconduct in the Secret Service seems to mischaracterize the stress of the job and its effects on the agents. The ultimate redemption of the security staff is also a fantasy. It begins as a delightful lighthearted comedy; then its 180-degree turn to Serious Stuff is jarring and hard to swallow. A charming if fantastical seriocomedy, and that's its only problem

here are plot twist!. This is a good movie, you just have to pay attention to plot elements and dialog

Reece L (de)

This isn't just an extended episode of The Twilight Zone; without a doubt, there's nothing else quite like it. The endless amount of critical threads made available in Seconds is astonishing, its vibrancy and depth ignored upon release in an unforgivable instance of critical ignorance. The cruel falsity of our individualistic freedom within such a system is on full display in the film's final moments, the psychological horror exiting the realm of the psyche and moving into that of the social sphere. Ultimately, "the company" portrayed in Seconds needs to self-perpetuate endlessly, as all means of production do in the US; if you come between them and their bottom line, you end up eliminated. This acknowledgment plays into its critique of the American dream, our identity crises leading to the need for the material as a means of validation, driving the machine that profits off of human suffering. It also raises questions about perception, both of ourselves and of others, utilizing mirrors, photographs, and memory to portray the frustratingly fluid nature of identity that always seems to be just out of reach. Frankenheimer makes it clear that this desperate reinvention would provide no clearer sense of a perfect identity, and rightfully so; the notion that constant renewal would in any way allow for a higher state of being is nonsense, as the high would begin to lose its edge quicker and quicker each time before ultimately trapping the participant in the same prison they were attempting to escape before. When faced with the idea of a second chance at life, man would absolutely jump at the opportunity to escape from their daily minutia in a desperate attempt to feel alive once again (as Hudson's character does), free from the self-imposed prison of detachment one constructs in a life that begins to feel routine out of a misguided sense of self-preservation. Famous for its gorgeously unnerving cinematography, Frankenheimer's film goes beyond stylistic perfection and commits to probing, immensely honest truths through disorienting content and a horrific premise. Science fiction regularly attempts to comment on social institutions that oppress the average civilian through slightly-heightened narrative constructs that exemplify this oppression in a way that both assuages the fears of the audience and challenges them to look for symptoms that could lead to this kind of phenomena; Seconds takes this idea a step further, imbuing this social commentary with a focus on the nature of human identity, crushing existentialism, and the constant need for renewed validation through rebirth